YAGICHO-HONTEN / Schemata Architects
Yagicho is a dried food store with an approximately 280-year history dealing with traditional Japanese dried foods including katsuobushi (dried bonito), konbu (kelp), and shiitake (Japanese mushroom), three basic ingredients to make dashi (soup stock) that forms the base of Japanese cuisine. Schemata Architects renovated their main store in Nihonbashi, Tokyo.
© Kenya Chiba
Architects: Schemata Architects
Location: Nihonbashimuromachi, Chuo, Tokyo 103-0022, Japan
Architect In Charge: Jo Nagasaka
Project Team: Toshihisa Aid, Kohei Hayashi
Area: 45.6 m2
Project Year: 2017
Photographs: Kenya Chiba
Construction: DECOR Inc.
© Kenya Chiba
From the architect. Yagicho is a dried food store with an approximately 280-year history dealing with traditional Japanese dried foods including katsuobushi (dried bonito), konbu (kelp), and shiitake (Japanese mushroom), three basic ingredients to make dashi (soup stock) that forms the base of Japanese cuisine. Schemata Architects renovated their main store in Nihonbashi, Tokyo.
© Kenya Chiba
Plan
© Kenya Chiba
The red color covers the building inside and out, looking as if the interior and the facades were painted red at once, but it is, in fact, the original color of the existing building. Observing that the red resembles the color of the cut section of dried bonito, we decided ...
© Kenya Chiba
Architects: Schemata Architects
Location: Nihonbashimuromachi, Chuo, Tokyo 103-0022, Japan
Architect In Charge: Jo Nagasaka
Project Team: Toshihisa Aid, Kohei Hayashi
Area: 45.6 m2
Project Year: 2017
Photographs: Kenya Chiba
Construction: DECOR Inc.
© Kenya Chiba
From the architect. Yagicho is a dried food store with an approximately 280-year history dealing with traditional Japanese dried foods including katsuobushi (dried bonito), konbu (kelp), and shiitake (Japanese mushroom), three basic ingredients to make dashi (soup stock) that forms the base of Japanese cuisine. Schemata Architects renovated their main store in Nihonbashi, Tokyo.
© Kenya Chiba
Plan
© Kenya Chiba
The red color covers the building inside and out, looking as if the interior and the facades were painted red at once, but it is, in fact, the original color of the existing building. Observing that the red resembles the color of the cut section of dried bonito, we decided ...
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